Fuller v. Venable

108 F. 126, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4537
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland
DecidedApril 1, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 108 F. 126 (Fuller v. Venable) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fuller v. Venable, 108 F. 126, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4537 (circtdmd 1901).

Opinion

MORRIS, District Judge.

This is a bill in equity filed by the complainant, Fuller, against Venable, Spence, and Graves, a bondholders’ committee, having in charge for the bondholders the sale by foreclosure and the reorganization of the Roanoke Street-Railway Company. The bill of complaint is in the nature of a bill to enforce a trust, or to enforce specific performance of an agreement, and the prayer of the bill is that the defendants be required to perform their duty to the complainant by delivery to him, without condition or reservation, the second mortgage bonds of the Roanoke Electric & Power Company, amounting to $21,000, to which the complainant claims to be entitled as the holder of the deposit certificates for first mortgage bonds of the Roanoke Street-Railway Company, deposited with the Mercantile Trust & Deposit Company of Baltimore under an agreement dated January 10,1898, between the defendants and the bondholders of the Roanoke Street-Railway Company. The question involved is whether or not the complainant can be required by the defendants, as a condition of his obtaining from them $21,000 income bonds of the new company, to produce and surrender certain defaulted coupons which had been detached from the old bonds before they were deposited, or be required to pay the money collected by the complainant for those coupons out of the proceeds of the ■ foreclosure sale, or whether the complainant is entitled to keep the money and to demand and receive the new bonds unconditionally.

The rights of the complainant are not based upon the $21,000 of old [127]*127bonds* which the complainant originally held. Those bonds he con-tided to a Mr. Trout to deposit for him under the terms of the agreement between the depositing bondholders and the defendants, first detaching from each bond three semiannual unpaid interest coupons, due as follows, viz. May 1, 1897, November 1, 1897, and May 1, 1898. The bonds were deposited, and the complainant obtained therefor certificates of deposit from the Mercantile Trust & Deposit Company of Baltimore, reciting that each bond had been deposited subject to the terms of the agreement of January 10, 1898, between the defendants and the bondholders, and subject to the order of the defendants, or a majority of them, and that the holder of the certificate assented to the agreement by receiving the certificate. It is clear, therefore, that the complainant can enforce only such rights as he is entitled to under the proper construction of the agreement, and that he is affected by all the equities which the bondholders’ agreement gives rise to. The purpose of that agreement was primarily to bring about a foreclosure of the mortgage securing the deposited bonds, and it authorized the defendants to represent the owners in all proceedings instituted for the collection of the bonds, “and to do whatever acts in their judgment may be necessary or desirable for the protection of the interests of the said bondholders.” By the agreement, the defendants were authorized to purchase the railway, and also the property, of the Roanoke Electric Light & Power Company, or other property, for the benefit of the holders of the bonds deposited, and to organize a corporation to own and operate the property purchased. Tn case of purchase} by the defendants of thee properties memtioneel, they were authorized to use} the deposited bonds and coupons in making payment therefor, and it was provided that the defendants should have power to mortgage: or pledge the: properties purchased to carry out any plan of reorganization that might be: adopted. It was further stipulated that in any plan of reorganization provision sheralel be made feu* issuing new first mortgage bonels sufficient to pay the claims of creditor-s and the* expenses of the foreclosure and reorganization proceedings. and that the holders of the: old mortgage bonds should receive for eacli bond deposited a new noneumulative ine-ome mortgage bonel, junior emly to the before-mentioned first mortgage bonels.

It is conceded in the agreed statement of facts that it was the intend ion of the defendants, acting as said committee, and of the parties actively engaged in the attempt to reorganize the company under the agreement and plan of January 10,1898, — and that they formulated their plan upon the basis, — -that no payment or compensation was to be made for the bonds deposited under said agreement other than the delivery of the new income bonds, nor for the coupons maturing May 1, 3897, and subsequently, and that all the depositors except the complainant did either deposit with their bonds all the coupons then unpaid, including the coupon maturing May 3, 1897, or, upon being notified to do so, did afterwards deliver the same to the said Mercantile Trust & Deposit Company. Proceedings to foreclose the mortgage were instituted by the trustees named therein, and by a decree passed May 3, 1899, commissioners were appointed to sell the mortgaged property, and they were directed, after the payment of costs [128]*128and certain preferred claims, to apply the proceeds of sale to the payment of all coupons then due (the mortgage having specially provided that in case of sale the coupons should he preferred to the principal of the bonds), and to apply the residue to the principal of the bonds ratably. The defendants, as such committee, purchased said property at the foreclosure sale for $150,000, and the power company property for $31,000, and settled for said property, using in said settlement the bonds deposited with said trust company, and all the coupons deposited therewith, including complainant’s bonds and coupons. Soon after the confirmation of the sale, the attention of defendants was for the first time called to the fact that the coupons due May 1, 1897, November 1,1897, and May 1,1898, had not been deposited with complainant’s bonds, but had been retained by him, and the complainant was notified by them that no provision had been made under the reorganization agreement for payment to depositing bondholders of the coupons due May 1, 1897, and subsequently, and that the complainant could not participate equally with the other depositing bondholders in the issue of'income bonds of the new company, unless he first put himself on an equal footing with all the other depositing bondholders by either depositing the coupons retained, or by refunding the money he might collect for them under the decree out of the proceeds of sale. The complainant refused to accede to the defendants’ contention as to his rights, and collected, in payment of his retained coupons, from the commissions out of the proceeds of sale, the sum of $2,115.98.

After the consummation of the purchase of the properties acquired by the defendants as a committee, they called a meeting of the depositing first mortgage bondholders .and certain preferred stockholders, at which it was explained that the bad physical condition of the properties required expenditures, which, with the expenditures provided for by the bondholders’ agreement, required an increase in the issue of new first mortgage bonds, and thereupon a plan of reorganization was formulated, and issued to the depositing bondholders, dated November 20, 1899, which provided for the issue of $300,000 first mortgage 5 per cent, bonds, $190,000 income noncumulative 4 per cent, bonds, and $200,000 of capital stock, and stated that the income bonds would be distributed to the depositors of the old bonds who had deposited their bonds, together with all the coupons maturing on and after May 1, 1897, or who, in order to equalize all holders of said bonds, refunded the cash received for the retained coupons from the commissioners who made the sale of the Roanoke Street-Railway Company.

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Bluebook (online)
108 F. 126, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuller-v-venable-circtdmd-1901.